Franny and Zooey

work by Salinger
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Franny and Zooey, volume containing two interrelated stories by J.D. Salinger, published in book form in 1961. The stories, originally published in The New Yorker magazine, concern Franny and Zooey Glass, two members of the family (also including Seymour, Buddy, and Boo-Boo) that was the subject of most of Salinger’s short fiction.

Franny is an intellectually precocious late adolescent who tries to attain spiritual purification by obsessively reiterating the “Jesus prayer” as an antidote to the perceived superficiality and corruptness of life. She subsequently suffers a nervous breakdown. In the second story, her older brother Zooey attempts to heal Franny by pointing out that her constant repetition of the “Jesus prayer” is as self-involved and egotistical as the egotism against which she rails.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Kathleen Kuiper.